> On Sep 4, 2024, at 15:14, Josh Poimboeuf <jpoim...@kernel.org> wrote:
> 
> On Wed, Sep 04, 2024 at 02:34:44PM +0800, zhang warden wrote:
>> In the scenario where multiple people work together to maintain the
>> same system, or a long time running system, the patch sets will
>> inevitably be cumulative. I think kernel can maintain and tell user
>> this most accurate information by one sysfs interface.
> 
> If there are multiple people applying patches independently from each
> other (to the same function even!), you are playing with fire, as there
> could easily be implicit dependencies and conflicts between the patches.
> 
> 
Yep, I agree with you. This is not a good practice.

But we can work further, livepatch can tell which function is now running. This 
feature can do more than that.

Afterall, users alway want to know if their newly patched function successfully 
enabled and using to fix the bug-existed kernel function.

With this feature, user can confirm their patch is successfully running instead 
of using crash to look into /proc/kcore to make sure this function is running 
now. (I always use this method to check my function patched ... lol).

And I think further, if we use kpatch-build[1], `kpatch list` can not only tell 
us which patch is enabled, but also tell us the relationship between running 
function and patched module.
I think this is an exciting feature...

[1] https://github.com/dynup/kpatch.git


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